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Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
Woman sitting on kitchen floor near open fridge eating takeout food at home in a cozy setting
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AITAH for throwing away my roommate's boyfriend's food after weeks of him leaving gross, half-eaten stuff in our fridge?
I live with one roommate, both 23F & the biggest issue in our apartment is that her boyfriend is here constantly without actually living here. he sleeps over most of the week (only to come home on the weekends), showers here, uses our dishes & leaves mess behind, but the thing that finally pushed me over the end was the fridge.
He keeps leaving half eaten food in there like it's his personal kitchen. not normal leftovers put away properly. i mean open takeout containers, sauce cups with no lids, leaking bags of wings, containers with two bites left, stuff shoved in there uncovered & then forgotten.
At first i brought it up to my roommate, not him. i told here a few times that if he was going to keep food here, it needed to at least be closed up & thrown out when it was done. she always said sorry & that's she'd talk to him, but nothing changed.
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At that point, it wasn’t just annoying, it was becoming a full-on routine. Every time you opened the fridge, it felt like a gamble. Would it be normal groceries, or a mystery situation waiting to ruin your day? You tried to be patient, you went through the proper channels, you gave multiple chances. But when nothing changes, it stops feeling like a simple oversight and starts feeling like straight-up disrespect in a shared space.
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At first i brought it up to my roommate, not him. i told here a few times that if he was going to keep food here, it needed to at least be closed up & thrown out when it was done. she always said sorry & that's she'd talk to him, but nothing changed.
Then it got worse. one time wing sauce leaked onto the shelf. another time an old rice container smelled so bad i had to empty half the fridge to find it. after that i told her directly that if he left open nasty food in there again, i was throwing it away.
Last week i fully cleaned the fridge. tossed expired stuff, wiped everything down, reorganized it. the very next night he left an open container of shrimp pasta on the top shelf with no lid, no foil, nothing. just sitting there uncovered after weeks of the same problem.
So i threw it away.
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Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
Person cleaning and organizing empty refrigerator shelves with cloth, maintaining hygiene in kitchen
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The next day he asked where his food was & i told him the trash. he got mad & said it was expensive & he was saving it. i said then he should have put a lid on it & taken it home instead of treating our fridge like a dumping ground. my roommate got mad too (of course she would) & said i had no right to throw away someone else’s food.
I said i did, actually, after asking nicely for weeks, going through her first & warning them both what would happen next time. he doesn’t live here, doesn’t pay rent & i’m done cleaning up after a grown man who acts like shared space means somebody else will deal with it.
Some friends of mine think i was right. a couple think i should've kept fighting with my roommate instead of touching his food. maybe throwing it away was agressive, but i also feel like after enough warnings, uncovered rotting leftovers stop being just food & start being a hygiene problem.
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So, was this a fair response after weeks of dealing with it, or did things go a bit too far? People had a lot to say about shared spaces, boundaries, and fridge etiquette. Let’s see what the internet thinks.
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Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
Open fridge with random items and toy dinosaurs on fruit, showing messy and unusual food storage situation
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Vandreeson
"He needs to start paying 1/3 of the rent. It's not his place, and not his fridge. He's lucky you waited at all. If he's not paying for anything, he gets no say. You need to read your lease, then talk to your landlord about how long guests can stay. This is all on him, for leaving his food there and thinking he can just take up space in your fridge or house without paying."
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An-empty-road
"Time to make the house uncomfortable for them both. Take up yoga in the living room. Start practicing the accordion. Suddenly take up cooking Surströmming. Host late-night parties. Or early morning coffee sessions that include loud political debates. Suddenly become their Best Friend Forever that never leaves them alone and needs to talk about Random Topic 77 at 2 am, it's reeeealy important."
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Grouchywhennhungry
"What does your landlord say about overnights, and how are utilities currently paid for?? I'd be telling your roommate she needs to cover her bf's costs".
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In the end, this wasn’t just about food, it was about respect in a shared space. After repeated warnings and no change, taking action felt inevitable. Living with others requires basic consideration, and when that’s missing, boundaries get enforced. Maybe it was a bit harsh, but the message was definitely received.
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